God's Wonderful Railwaymen 2022 - Swindon Railway Works

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 44

  • @neilfitz7186
    @neilfitz7186 8 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you Swindon Cable and the makers of this wonderful documentary. Inspiring for what was achieved and built there for so long; but now sad in equal measure. Thank you for posting this

    • @paullangcaster7909
      @paullangcaster7909  8 месяцев назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed it. It is sad we have lost such an important engineering asset.

  • @PaulDavies-r5w
    @PaulDavies-r5w 5 месяцев назад

    Having served in the Army I can imagine the pride and camaraderie and humour was much the same .
    These people produced some of the best quality heavy engineering seen in Britain .
    They and Swindon works deserve all the accolades they get .
    The Great Western Railway was unique in many ways and all Western Countrymen are proud they served the this wonderful company

  • @TheRubberDuck
    @TheRubberDuck 2 года назад +12

    I did moved to Swindon for a better comutte to work a few years ago and remember I was excited to check out what is left of Swindon Works, but it's a real shame, watching this documentary, seeing how it once was now reduced to essentially the main shed and side shed where the museam is standing, very little of the herritate was kept it seemed despite without the works Swindon would of been one of many small towns that would get ignored. It's a real shame they didn't preserve move of what Swindon's history.

  • @PeaveyPV20
    @PeaveyPV20 2 года назад +6

    Good watch. I was born shildon which also lost its major employer, British rail wagon works, town never recovered.

  • @HampshireVideo
    @HampshireVideo 2 года назад +8

    Remembering hopping the fence when Swindon was breaking peaks. Such a shame that British Engineering has gone, locos from the UK were once shipped worldwide. Now we have boring Class 66s imported and our industry has gone.

    • @markp6982
      @markp6982 Год назад +1

      It was a deliberate policy due the signing of UNIDROIT Treaty in 1948. Took a while to wreck things here.

  • @rockabilly375
    @rockabilly375 2 года назад +6

    I was a kid when the works closed . Swindon was THE place to go if you liked railways. Our school had a trip planned for the GWR 100 years celebrations. But they closed the works down and cancelled everything.
    So many jobs lost.

  • @vishal_electrodharwad7678
    @vishal_electrodharwad7678 2 года назад +1

    Thanks .Fantastic coverage,

  • @daystatesniper01
    @daystatesniper01 2 года назад +5

    As sad as this is/was the same happened all over the country , Donny, Crewe, Derby etc' etc'

    • @markp6982
      @markp6982 Год назад +1

      All deliberate policy to deindustrialise us in favour of EU and Far East.

  • @Guitar6ty
    @Guitar6ty 2 года назад +3

    It was also the year Thatcher got rid of all the bus works in every major city along with the miners and the rest of our industry.

    • @markp6982
      @markp6982 Год назад

      Yes. She destroyed so much including mines. All part of the UNIDROIT Treaty signed in 1948. I believe.

  • @MrPete1x
    @MrPete1x 2 года назад +3

    Excellent video. Thank you for showing this

  • @leonblittle226
    @leonblittle226 2 года назад +10

    The mighty workshops like Swindon and Crewe are now just a memory, the great western is run by Hitachi junk with ironing boards for seats and half the people who live on the site of the works have no idea it even existed while scrolling along their chinese slave built iphones. What a world it became, so utterly depressing and vapid.

    • @4376ED
      @4376ED 2 года назад

      For your info Hitachi build bullet trains in Japan. The trains they build in the UK are built to UK specs. One thing that Thatcher did was to destroy british manufacturing, of course she was helped by the unions.

    • @markp6982
      @markp6982 Год назад +1

      Yup. Peeps mainly don't give a toss it seems.

  • @piranhafish
    @piranhafish 2 года назад +7

    I got a apprenticeship there then found out it was the year thatcher was stopping apprenticeships!! I ended on a year yop there instead which was not worth anything and on over half the pay reduced then it shut!!!

  • @petepnut
    @petepnut 2 года назад +2

    Nikki Mideo - cameraman - passed on the Kegworth air crash Jan 1989. RIP mate.

    • @paullangcaster7909
      @paullangcaster7909  2 года назад

      Hi Peter, Did you know Nikki? Cheers, Paul

    • @petepnut
      @petepnut 2 года назад +2

      @@paullangcaster7909 Yes Paul. I was an EMI Systems Engineer on the commissioning team for Swindon Viewpoint, and was subsequently posted as Viewpoint's Engineer for three years. I left Viewpoint in '76, but visited Victoria Road at least once a month, and so was friendly with all the staff, volunteers and users of the facilities there. It was ironic that I travelled up the M1 on 8th Jan 1989, and passed East Midlands airport at 20:15 - five minutes before the aircraft crash there. I learnt that Nikki was onboard the follwing weekend. Your name rings a bell with me - probably through Swindon Cable in the 80's ? Regards, Peter

    • @paullangcaster7909
      @paullangcaster7909  2 года назад

      @@petepnut Peter, I thought I knew your name. I was a volunteer at Viewpoint from about 1978. I later worked for Swindon Cable from about 83, all the way until
      It closed in 2000. Fond memories of all those pioneering days and Nikki!

  • @rogerbond7811
    @rogerbond7811 2 года назад +2

    Thought the union reps came across very well. Well worth watching. Thanks.

  • @BRELElectra
    @BRELElectra 6 месяцев назад

    Soon Newton Aycliffe will go down the same path as Swindon Works. It’s just tragic for such a new site like Newton Aycliffe…

  • @matt7775
    @matt7775 2 года назад +12

    Now it's 2022 and the working man/woman has even less rights and probably less pay.

  • @conorgraafpietermaritzburg3720
    @conorgraafpietermaritzburg3720 2 года назад

    Good on you old Geysers, go for it.

  • @NQY-flyer
    @NQY-flyer 2 года назад +1

    I’ve seen a similar documentary about Swindon works Sad to see it all gone The art of “coiling a wire” lost 😡

  • @woden20
    @woden20 2 года назад +10

    Old people trust their government, that's where the problem started.

    • @xr6lad
      @xr6lad 2 года назад +1

      And many didn’t know when there’s a time to strike and when there was a time not to. And thought the government would always pay. And the general public got sick of it. Which is why you got Thatcher.

  • @BrianWatts-i1b
    @BrianWatts-i1b Месяц назад

    Unbelievable loss

  • @villageoldman
    @villageoldman 2 года назад +14

    Now a shopping centre selling cheap imported tat.

    • @angrygromit93
      @angrygromit93 2 года назад +3

      Have you even been to the outlest village? I think not.

    • @jimbobobable
      @jimbobobable 2 года назад +3

      @@angrygromit93 I have, It's shite.

    • @angrygromit93
      @angrygromit93 2 года назад +2

      @@jimbobobable Perhaps, but over 3M people a year disagree and visit.
      What would you rather had been done wiht the site? A massive poundland perhaps?

    • @TheRubberDuck
      @TheRubberDuck 2 года назад

      It's mostly London branded shops, far from "Cheap" these days...

    • @angrygromit93
      @angrygromit93 2 года назад

      @@TheRubberDuck clue is in the name:
      'Designer Outlet''

  • @markp6982
    @markp6982 Год назад +1

    So IT made railway engineering obsolete? Of course not. Its done in France and other places as ever. Thatcher & Co had no authority to shut down Swindon or the mines for that matter. We are the authority. Not them. In law. They did not own what they destroyed. The people did.